Mary J. Goepfert, External Affairs Officer, NJOEM [email protected] 609.963.6818 Topics Covered  Emergency management systems in NJ  Emergency Preparedness 101  Organizational disaster response, working with local officials.

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Transcript Mary J. Goepfert, External Affairs Officer, NJOEM [email protected] 609.963.6818 Topics Covered  Emergency management systems in NJ  Emergency Preparedness 101  Organizational disaster response, working with local officials.

Mary J. Goepfert, External Affairs Officer, NJOEM [email protected]

609.963.6818

Topics Covered

 Emergency management systems in NJ  Emergency Preparedness 101  Organizational disaster response, working with local officials

Emergency Management: Definition  Emergency Management is the discipline and profession of applying science, technology, planning and management to deal with extreme events that can injure or kill large numbers of people, do extensive damage to property, and disrupt community life.

 Emergency Management is an all hazards approach to planning for disasters within a community.

 Emergency Management brings together disaster.

all areas of government, private sector, private non-profit sector, faith-based community to mitigate a crisis or local

Emergency Planning – 5 w’s

 Who ? – (in NJ) NJ State Police/OEM, 21 counties, 565 municipalities  What ? – natural, technological, civil disasters  When ? – 4 phases of disaster: mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery  Where ? – everywhere: state, counties, municipalities, schools, hospitals, businesses, PNP’s  Why ? – Emergency planning saves lives, protects property, and the environment  How ? – use standard practices

Emergency Management in NJ

 Municipal  County  State  Federal  “bottom up” approach  “Phases” model: mitigation, preparedness, response, recovery, prevention

Model: Disaster Cycle

Types of Disasters

 Natural  Technological  Civil

Community Impacts and Protective Actions  “Notice” vs. “No-Notice”  Power and utility  Debris  Road Closures  Property Damage  Death, injury  Evacuation  Shelter in Place  Closing  Emergency Services and Hospital - Surge

Protective Action Recommendations  Shelter-in-Place, “Lockdown”  Evacuation  How are you notified of these decisions ?

Term to Know: “State of Emergency”     Allows local authorities to deploy resources quickly Can be local or statewide Will be publicly announced, media, social media Know: what is being asked of the public ? – e.g. don’t drive, curfews, sometimes no public actions are required

Action Step: Stay informed

 Identify your local and county OEM Officials  www.ready.nj.gov

– links to counties  Stay informed – opt in, connect, follow, “like”

Identify where you might be vulnerable – your local Office of Emergency Management can help

Second Step - Facilities: Mitigate Risk  Structural – clear debris, secure shelves, maintain properties, explore generator for back-up power.

 Prepare to shelter in place: water, non-perishable food/snacks, secure area in the event of tornadic activity  Resources for evacuation – insure people with mobility impairments can exit – evac chairs or assigned staff  Would staff need to stay overnight ? What is needed to support this ?

Incident Command System

 “Incident Commander” leads field response. What about your organization – who will interface with emergency responders ?

Disaster Recovery

 Work with the larger community, not just emergency responders  Long term recovery – centralized systems  FEMA’s role regarding disaster survivors  Physical recovery – injuries, debris, mold, repairs

Emergency Preparedness 101

 Stay Informed (“Connect” handout)  72 hour kit  Family Plan  Barriers to preparedness  Consider Disability, Chronic Illness